Republicans Fail to Stop Gitmo Transfers into US
WASHINGTON - Handing President Barack Obama a partial victory in his effort to close the Guantanamo Bay prison, House Democrats on Thursday repelled a Republican effort to block transfer of any of the detainees to the U.S.
Instead, by a 224-193 vote, the House stood by a Democratic plan to allow suspected enemy combatants held at the controversial Guantanamo facility to be shipped to U.S. soil - but only to be prosecuted for their suspected crimes.
The Guantanamo restrictions were attached by House-Senate negotiators on a $42.8 billion homeland security appropriations bill.
President Barack Obama has ordered the facility closed in January but has yet to offer a plan to meet his deadline.
Democratic leaders had to push hard to win the vote because many Democrats two weeks ago had cast a nonbinding but politically safe vote against any Guantanamo detainee transfers. But several Democrats from swing districts said they saw little political risk on Thursday's vote.
"It's a non-issue. Inside the beltway stuff," said first-term Rep. Dan Maffai, D-N.Y. "People care about jobs, the economy, health care."
"I haven't had one person ask me about Guantanamo," said Rep. Baron Hill, D-Ind. He added that he does "not in the least" fear it as an issue in next year's elections.
Permitting Guantanamo prisoners to be transferred to U.S. soil to stand trial had been a bipartisan compromise earlier. It mostly tracks current restrictions put in place in June and is similar to a version backed by Republicans earlier in the year. In fact, Republicans such as top Appropriations panel Rep. Jerry Lewis of California helped fashion the compromise.
But in the absence of a plan from the administration for closing the facility, Lewis has toughened his talk, calling the administration's plan misguided and potentially dangerous.
"Terrorists should not be treated like common criminals in federal court," Lewis said. "These detainees are enemies of the state, and should be treated as such by being held and brought to justice right where they are - in Guantanamo Bay."
Democrats say that Republicans are simply seeking a political opening.
Still, the public is mixed at best on the idea of closing Guantanamo and transferring some of its prisoners to the U.S. Respondents to an AP/Gfk poll in June found Americans evenly divided on whether they support Obama's decision to close Guantanamo. A Gallup poll taken around the same time - but with the question worded differently - found that respondents opposed closing Guantanamo by a 2-1 margin and rejected the idea of moving detainees to their states by a 4-1 margin.
Several of the fiscal 2010 funding bills contain varying restrictions on the transfer of Guantanamo detainees, reflecting widespread opposition among voters. The Senate-passed defense appropriations bill, for example, contains an outright ban on releasing Guantanamo detainees into the U.S., including for trial or incarceration.
The underlying spending bill also backs the Obama administration's refusal to release new photos showing U.S. personnel abusing detainees held overseas. The measure supports Obama's decision to allow the secretary of defense to bar the release of detainee photos for three years.
The American Civil Liberties Union has filed suit to obtain unreleased photos of detainee abuse under the Freedom of Information Act and won two rounds in federal court. The measure would essentially trump the ACLU's case.
In response, the administration has appealed to the Supreme Court and Obama has said he would use every available means to block release of additional detainee abuse photos because they could whip up anti-American sentiment overseas and endanger U.S. troops. His powers include issuing an order to classify the photos, thus blocking their release.
But the detainee photos provision earned a sharp rebuke from Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., normally a leadership loyalist from her perch as chairwoman of the powerful Rules Committee. She said that "the people's right to know is more important than the government's desire to keep things secret."
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
8 Comments so far
Show AllThe representative might here more of Gitmo if more of us felt that closing it would return the Bill of Rights to the United States.
Well, let's see it closed. But while US government kidnappings and torture continue, let's not pretend that the gesture is much more than symbolic.
You are absolutely right rtdrury.
This article quotes this idiot rep. Jerry Lewis, without pointing out that he is condemning people as terrorists without any process in law and in those applied by the US have been contravention of all international standards.
Plus the fact “where they are” is because they were transported there against their will mostly after being kidnapped by the US or their agents and tortured, the vast majority of whom have nothing to do with terrorism, although some may have acted in resisting American illegal and unjustified invasions and occupations of countries. This whole construct of the Bush administration of “illegal combatant” is so week, as contrasted against the state terrorism of the USA that people like Jerry Lewis should be pilloried for their ignorance, xenophobia and fear/hate mongering.
A small aside to the AP writers’ English or his valuation of human rights also; People are transported, moved or transferred. Goods, cargo and merchandise is “shipped”. And although these detainees are being treated as less than human by a fascist government in a concentration camp without laws, perhaps AP writers could refrain from approving of their torture, as well as the torture of the English language.
Democracy depends on the electorate being informed, however people like this Representative with the help of a compliant MSM succeed in perpetrating ignorance and hate. It is no wonder the US is in such a disastrous state of fascism and ignorance with law makers like this and a media like that.
Common Dreams is really doing its readers a disservice publishing mainstream media articles like this one from the Associated Press. The AP doesn't even attempt to enlighten the reader on the legal precedents or lack thereof in handling alleged prisoners of war and international terrorists. The AP cites poll results but it's extremely likely that those polled were not informed one iota of the options available to dispense justice in the gitmo cases. This issue of gitmo and many others are truly garbage in, garbage out. We want the media to put forth the relevant info, in high quality. We have to demand it, because the elites are not going to give up power voluntarily, even when they are down on their knees like today.
"These detainees are enemies of the state,..." - Rep. Jerry Lewis, R-Cal. This quote jumps out. An actual lawmaker saying this-- when, obviously, they are as yet just suspects, because they haven't been tried yet!
only Americans are innocent until proven guilty.
(is this Jerry Lewis the comedian?)
Great start, now give Gitmo back to Cuba.
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
But the detainee photos provision earned a sharp rebuke from Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., normally a leadership loyalist from her perch as chairwoman of the powerful Rules Committee. She said that "the people's right to know is more important than the government's desire to keep things secret."
My God! With an attitude like this, how did she ever get elected to congress?
I guess we should be grateful that a small majority of our Congress actually voted to obey the applicable law, legal precedent and the US Constitution on Gitmo...
So, we get a tiny sliver of the big promise. Such are the Obama regime's "bold initiatives".